This simple tutorial shows how to install ‘McMojave’, a Mac OS Mojave like theme, in Ubuntu 18.04, Ubuntu 19.10. Following steps will first download and install the GTK theme, icons theme, and a set of wallpapers. And then apply new themes and tweak the left dock to make your Ubuntu desktop look like Mac OS X.
- Icon sizes and formats for all operating systems: Windows, Mac OS X, iOS, Android, Linux and even Windows Phone. Articles - Graphic design for software manufacturers: icons, UI design and web design.
- 1 day ago The official public repository for CUPS, an Apple open-source project widely used for printing on Linux, is all-but dormant since the lead developer left Apple at the end of 2019. From a report: Apple adopted CUPS for Mac OS X in 2002, and hired its author Michael Sweet in 2007, with Cupertino also acquiring the CUPS source code. Sweet continued to work on printing technology at Apple.
- Although Mac OS X has a very nice looking interface but if you want to customize your Mac OS X to a higher level you will certainly need some icons to do so. BTW, here is a guide for those users who would like to Install Windows on Mac too, you can take a look. PaperPlanet Mac Icon Pack. Umiicons full Mac Icon. Stock icons set.
Time again for some new icons for an Eclipse RCP launcher. While The Gimp can easily create XPM and Windows ICO files, when it comes to Mac OS “icns” format, you won’t have any built in support.
There are some fine tools out there for Mac OS, but if you are running Linux and don’t want to buy a Mac just for creating some icon files, png2icns comes to the rescue. It is a small command line tool which simply creates an “icns” files from some “png” files.
Create your icon files as “png” in multiple resolutions. If you are creating an Eclipse RCP launcher, you will, most likely, have them anyway for creating your Windows “ico” file. Place them in any folder you like:
Ensure that you have the “png2icns” application installed. On Ubuntu it comes with the package “icnsutils”, which can simply be installed by executing:
Now call “png2icns”. As the man page suggest you need to provide all PNG files, that you want to be part of the icon, as argument. The first argument is the output filename. Also you can let the shell find the correct PNG file by using the wildcard (*):
Os X Vs Mac Os
Easy! ;-)
Mac Os X Icons For Linux
PS: If anything goes wrong, “png2icns” will complain at the command line (e.g. due to some wrong resolution).